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Parent with child at a vaccine rally

Support for school vaccination requirements edges up, but some resistance remains

May 7, 2021
New survey results from a consortium of universities that includes Northwestern, Harvard, Northeastern and Rutgers reveal a slight increase in Americans who support vaccination requirements. Overall, there was a 4-percentage point rise from 54% to 58% since February and the growth holds across gender, race and ethnicity and income levels.
art science engineering climate

At the intersection of art and science

May 6, 2021
Civil and Environmental Engineering Professor Aaron Packman and Earth and Planetary Sciences Professor Daniel Horton to showcase link between art and science at “Third Coast Disrupted: Artists and Scientists on Climate” beginning May 7

Celebrate 50 years of gospel with the Northwestern Community Ensemble

May 5, 2021 – from Northwestern Now
The gospel choir Northwestern Community Ensemble will celebrate 50 years of music ministry with a virtual concert and program at 6 p.m. on Saturday, May 8. The event will feature guest recording artist Donnie McClurkin and is open to the public with registration.
vaccine

Attitudes toward vaccination more favorable after J&J vaccine pause

May 4, 2021
While public awareness of the hold on the Johnson & Johnson (J&J) COVID-19 vaccine was very high, researchers of a national poll found no negative impact on vaccination attitudes. In fact, immediately following the pause, a slightly larger percentage of the unvaccinated moved to the pro-vaccine category.

How much does it itch?

April 30, 2021
A new, soft, wearable sensor developed by Northwestern University scientists quantifies itch by measuring scratching. Tested in patients with eczema, it can be used in any condition that causes itch.
eczema

How much does it itch?

April 30, 2021
Itch torments its sufferers and can be as debilitating as chronic pain. But it’s a hard symptom to measure -- particularly for the 10 million U.S. children with atopic dermatitis, also known as eczema. They can't always verbalize or quantify their suffering via a survey or scale.